redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
( May. 16th, 2003 09:58 am)
1 through 13 )
14. I am good at my work.
15. I am thoughtful.
16. I am a good writer.
redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
( May. 16th, 2003 09:58 am)
1 through 13 )
14. I am good at my work.
15. I am thoughtful.
16. I am a good writer.
Since I seem to be badly stalled on the novel-in-progress (I think, as [livejournal.com profile] papersky and Sylvia were discussing at Minicon, because it's too caught up in current events), I'm working on something else.

This one hasn't a title yet, but the filename for the moment is "extinct-tattoo.doc", and I just wrote 574 words.
Since I seem to be badly stalled on the novel-in-progress (I think, as [livejournal.com profile] papersky and Sylvia were discussing at Minicon, because it's too caught up in current events), I'm working on something else.

This one hasn't a title yet, but the filename for the moment is "extinct-tattoo.doc", and I just wrote 574 words.
redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
( May. 16th, 2003 09:34 pm)
I bought a pound of basmati rice yesterday. It came in a brown paper sack, with a printed label that said PAPER "the natural package".

That bag of rice is a surprisingly good example of the enabling technologies of our civilization. Paper, cheap enough to throw away--as I will when I finish writing this. Cheap color printing. Complex machinery that makes the bags. Containers. The rice in the bag a sophisticated variety, but grain is basic to the Neolithic Revolution. Agriculture gets the attention, but it wouldn't have been an epochal difference without containers for food storage and trainsport. Here and now, we have the technology to ship those containers halfway around the planet at a reasonable price, but the container is older than history, and essential to it.
redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
( May. 16th, 2003 09:34 pm)
I bought a pound of basmati rice yesterday. It came in a brown paper sack, with a printed label that said PAPER "the natural package".

That bag of rice is a surprisingly good example of the enabling technologies of our civilization. Paper, cheap enough to throw away--as I will when I finish writing this. Cheap color printing. Complex machinery that makes the bags. Containers. The rice in the bag a sophisticated variety, but grain is basic to the Neolithic Revolution. Agriculture gets the attention, but it wouldn't have been an epochal difference without containers for food storage and trainsport. Here and now, we have the technology to ship those containers halfway around the planet at a reasonable price, but the container is older than history, and essential to it.
.

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redbird: closeup of me drinking tea, in a friend's kitchen (Default)
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